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Tired and misconnected: A breakdown of brain modularity following sleep deprivation
Author(s) -
Ben Simon Eti,
MaronKatz Adi,
Lahav Nir,
Shamir Ron,
Hendler Talma
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
human brain mapping
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.005
H-Index - 191
eISSN - 1097-0193
pISSN - 1065-9471
DOI - 10.1002/hbm.23596
Subject(s) - sleep deprivation , psychology , mood , amygdala , neuroscience , sleep (system call) , salience (neuroscience) , functional magnetic resonance imaging , default mode network , audiology , effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performance , non rapid eye movement sleep , cognition , developmental psychology , electroencephalography , medicine , psychiatry , computer science , operating system
Sleep deprivation (SD) critically affects a range of cognitive and affective functions, typically assessed during task performance. Whether such impairments stem from changes to the brain's intrinsic functional connectivity remain largely unknown. To examine this hypothesis, we applied graph theoretical analysis on resting‐state fMRI data derived from 18 healthy participants, acquired during both sleep‐rested and sleep‐deprived states. We hypothesized that parameters indicative of graph connectivity, such as modularity, will be impaired by sleep deprivation and that these changes will correlate with behavioral outcomes elicited by sleep loss. As expected, our findings point to a profound reduction in network modularity without sleep, evident in the limbic, default‐mode, salience and executive modules. These changes were further associated with behavioral impairments elicited by SD: a decrease in salience module density was associated with worse task performance, an increase in limbic module density was predictive of stronger amygdala activation in a subsequent emotional‐distraction task and a shift in frontal hub lateralization (from left to right) was associated with increased negative mood. Altogether, these results portray a loss of functional segregation within the brain and a shift towards a more random‐like network without sleep, already detected in the spontaneous activity of the sleep‐deprived brain. Hum Brain Mapp 38:3300–3314, 2017 . © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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